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2 Janelia Publications

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    04/23/25 | Whole-body simulation of realistic fruit fly locomotion with deep reinforcement learning
    Roman Vaxenburg , Igor Siwanowicz , Josh Merel , Alice A Robie , Carmen Morrow , Guido Novati , Zinovia Stefanidi , Gwyneth M Card , Michael B Reiser , Matthew M Botvinick , Kristin M Branson , Yuval Tassa , Srinivas C Turaga
    Nature. 2025 Apr 23:. doi: 10.1038/s41586-025-09029-4

    The body of an animal influences how its nervous system generates behavior1. Accurately modeling the neural control of sensorimotor behavior requires an anatomically detailed biomechanical representation of the body. Here, we introduce a whole-body model of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster in a physics simulator. Designed as a general-purpose framework, our model enables the simulation of diverse fly behaviors, including both terrestrial and aerial locomotion. We validate its versatility by replicating realistic walking and flight behaviors. To support these behaviors, we develop new phenomenological models for fluid and adhesion forces. Using data-driven, end-to-end reinforcement learning we train neural network controllers capable of generating naturalistic locomotion along complex trajectories in response to high-level steering commands. Additionally, we show the use of visual sensors and hierarchical motor control, training a high-level controller to reuse a pre-trained low-level flight controller to perform visually guided flight tasks. Our model serves as an open-source platform for studying the neural control of sensorimotor behavior in an embodied context.

     

    Preprint: www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2024/03/14/2024.03.11.584515

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    07/13/17 | Mapping the neural substrates of behavior.
    Robie AA, Hirokawa J, Edwards AW, Umayam LA, Lee A, Phillips ML, Card GM, Korff W, Rubin GM, Simpson JH, Reiser MB, Branson KM
    Cell. 2017-07-13;170(2):393-406. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2017.06.032

    Assigning behavioral functions to neural structures has long been a central goal in neuroscience and is a necessary first step toward a circuit-level understanding of how the brain generates behavior. Here, we map the neural substrates of locomotion and social behaviors for Drosophila melanogaster using automated machine-vision and machine-learning techniques. From videos of 400,000 flies, we quantified the behavioral effects of activating 2,204 genetically targeted populations of neurons. We combined a novel quantification of anatomy with our behavioral analysis to create brain-behavior correlation maps, which are shared as browsable web pages and interactive software. Based on these maps, we generated hypotheses of regions of the brain causally related to sensory processing, locomotor control, courtship, aggression, and sleep. Our maps directly specify genetic tools to target these regions, which we used to identify a small population of neurons with a role in the control of walking.

    •We developed machine-vision methods to broadly and precisely quantify fly behavior•We measured effects of activating 2,204 genetically targeted neuronal populations•We created whole-brain maps of neural substrates of locomotor and social behaviors•We created resources for exploring our results and enabling further investigation

    Machine-vision analyses of large behavior and neuroanatomy data reveal whole-brain maps of regions associated with numerous complex behaviors.

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